Published: July 14, 2011
Young Scientists Honored for their Extraordinary Contributions to Mental Health Research
GREAT NECK, N.Y. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Brain
& Behavior Research Foundation will honor five
outstanding researchers at the Annual Klerman and Freedman Awards event
in New York City on July 29.
These Young Investigators are among the more than 3,300 scientists the
Foundation has supported with funding for mental health research. Since
1987, Brain & Behavior Research Foundation has awarded close to $300
million in over 4,000 NARSAD grants to scientists worldwide. The
Foundation is dedicated to finding the causes, improving treatments and
preventing the mental illnesses that affect an overwhelming one-in-four
people in the United States.
"The Young Investigator grants keep the field of mental health research
robust with innovative scientists," said Benita Shobe, Brain & Behavior
Research Foundation President and CEO. "We are proud to support a new
generation of researchers pioneering the way to breakthroughs, unlocking
the mysteries of mental illness, and helping to relieve the suffering of
those afflicted."
The Klerman and Freedman Awards are given in honor of Drs. Gerald L.
Klerman and Daniel X. Freedman whose legacies as researchers, teachers,
physicians and administrators indelibly influenced neuropsychiatry and
continue to inspire scientists today.
The Young Investigators being honored:
2011 KLERMAN AWARDEE
Chadi A. Calarge, M.D., 2007 NARSAD Young Investigator of University
of Iowa, addressed the long term safety of the antipsychotic drug
risperidone in children and adolescents. Dr. Calarge has presented
results of this study at several major scientific meetings and has
several articles published in scientific journals. He has gone on to
receive an NIMH exploratory research grant and a K-Award on this subject.
2011 FREEDMAN AWARDEE
Alexandre Bonnin, Ph.D., of Vanderbilt University, showed the
chemical serotonin's critical role within the brain during fetal
development. His studies have direct clinical implications because SSRI
antidepressants act on molecules that determine levels of serotonin in
the brain. Dr. Bonnin's work is already changing the way we think about
how the brain develops in health and illness, and is a superb blend of
technical prowess, creativity, and hard work.
2011 KLERMAN AWARD HONORABLE MENTIONS
Brian M. D'Onofrio, Ph.D., of Indiana University
Jennifer
S. Silk, Ph.D., of Western Psychiatric Institute and
Clinic/University of Pittsburgh
2011 FREEDMAN AWARD HONORABLE MENTIONS
Andrew A. Pieper, M.D., Ph.D., of University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Alberto Bacci, Ph.D., of
European Brain Research Institute
The nation's largest private funder of mental health research, Brain &
Behavior Research Foundation is committed to alleviating the suffering
of mental illness by awarding grants to innovative researchers leading
to advances and breakthroughs. First named NARSAD (an acronym for
National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression), the
Foundation funds scientists at every stage of their careers in
every major area of cutting-edge research for brain and behavior
disorders.
Visit our website for more information: www.bbrfoundation.org

Brain & Behavior Research Foundation
Dianne
Ackerman, 516-829-0091
E-mail: dackerman@bbrfoundation.org
Copyright © 2012, Business Wire, Inc., All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2012, NewsBlaze,
Daily News